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cheap-di

JavaScript dependency injection like Autofac in .Net

  • 2.2.2
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76
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cheap-di

JavaScript dependency injection like Autofac in .Net

How to use

You have an interface (base/abstract class) and its implementation (derived class)

user-repository.js

export class UserRepository {
  constructor() {
    if (new.target === UserRepository) {
        throw new TypeError('Cannot construct UserRepository instance directly');
    }
  }
  list() {
    throw new Error("Not implemented");
  }
  getById(userId) {
    throw new Error("Not implemented");
  }
}

fake-user-repository.js

import { UserRepository } from './user-repository';

export class FakeUserRepository extends UserRepository {
  constructor() {
    super();
    this.users = [
      {
        id: 1,
        name: 'user-1'
      },
      {
        id: 2,
        name: 'user-2'
      },
    ];
  }
  list() {
    return this.users;
  }
  getById(userId) {
    return this.users.find(user => user.id === userId);
  }
}

There is simple logger. logger.js

export class Logger {
  debug(message) {
    throw new Error("Not implemented");
  }
}

console-logger.js

import { Logger} from './logger';

export class ConsoleLogger extends Logger {
  constructor(prefix) {
    super();
    this.prefix = prefix;
  }
  debug(message) {
    console.log(`${this.prefix}: ${message}`);
  }
}

You have the repository consumer. To allow DI container inject dependencies in your consumer class you should specify __dependencies static property. That property should contain constructor array in the order of your constructor.

user-service.js

import { dependencies } from 'cheap-di';
import { Logger } from './logger';
import { UserRepository } from './user-repository';

export class UserService {
  static [dependencies] = [ UserRepository, Logger ];
  
  constructor(userRepository, logger) {
    this.userRepository = userRepository;
    this.logger = logger;
  }
  
  list() {
    this.logger.debug('Access to users list');
    return this.userRepository.list();
  }
  
  get(userId) {
    return this.userRepository.getById(userId);
  }
}

Dependency registration

some-config.js

import { container } from 'cheap-di';

import { ConsoleLogger} from './console-logger';
import { FakeUserRepository } from './fake-user-repository';
import { Logger} from './logger';
import { UserRepository } from './user-repository';

container.registerType(ConsoleLogger).as(Logger).with('most valuable message prefix');
container.registerType(FakeUserRepository).as(UserRepository);

To get instance of your service with injected parameters you should call resolve method.

some-place.js

import { container } from 'cheap-di';

import { UserService } from './user-service';

const service = container.resolve(UserService);
const users = service.list();

TypeScript

logger.ts

export abstract class Logger {
  abstract debug: (message: string) => void;
}

console-logger.ts

import { Logger} from './logger';

export class ConsoleLogger extends Logger {
  constructor(prefix) {
    super();
    this.prefix = prefix;
  }
  debug(message: string) {
    console.log(`${this.prefix}: ${message}`);
  }
}

@dependencies decorator can be used to simplify dependency syntax

user-service.ts

import { dependencies } from 'cheap-di';
import { Logger } from './logger';
import { UserRepository } from './user-repository';

@dependencies(UserRepository, Logger)
export class UserService {
  constructor(
    private userRepository: UserRepository,
    private logger: Logger,
  ) {
  }
  
  list() {
      this.logger.debug('Access to users list');
      return this.userRepository.list();
  }
  
  get(userId) {
      return this.userRepository.getById(userId);
  }
}

@inject decorator can be used instead of @dependencies like below:

import { inject } from 'cheap-di';

export class UserService {
  constructor(
    @inject(UserRepository) private userRepository: UserRepository,
    @inject(Logger) private logger: Logger,
  ) {
  }
  ...
}

This approach allows you to mix dependency with injection params with any order:

class Service {
  constructor(
    message1: string,
    @inject(Repository) public repository: Repository,
    message2: string,
    @inject(Database) public db: Database,
  ) {
  }
}

const message1 = '123';
const message2 = '456';
container.registerType(Service).with(message1, message2);

@singleton decorator allows you to inject the same instance everywhere.

user-service.ts

import { singleton } from 'cheap-di';
import { Logger } from './logger';
import { UserRepository } from './user-repository';

@singleton
export class UserService {
  names: string[];
  constructor() {
    this.names = [];
  }
  
  list() {
      return this.names;
  }
  
  add(name: string) {
      this.names.push(name);
  }
}

You can see more examples in cheap-di/src/ContainerImpl.test.ts

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Package last updated on 11 Aug 2021

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